MEDIA HISTORY - COMS 300

Syllabus for COMS 300 SPRING 2010

About this course Earlyprinters

This course surveys the history of the mass media -- the people, the institutions and the ideas that animated our past and influence our future. Major themes in media history include changing technologies, changing social roles and the changing structure and business of the mass media.

One goal of the class will be for you to learn a little about historical research in media. You'll read original articles, speeches and texts by famous authors. You'll compare articles written for audiences in the past. And you'll search for information about some of the most fascinating people in the world.

Another goal is to learn about history itself. History is civilization's memory, and as Santayana famously said, those who can't remember the past are doomed to repeat it. History is an aid to the interpretation of the future and the dressing room of politics. Some historians have hoped simply to show how things really were, but today, historians understand that our views of the past are socially constructed. "We look at the present through a rear-view mirror," as Marshall McLuhan said. "We march backwards into the future."

 

 

Announcements:

Communications students are asked to take the following brief survey: http://radford.qualtrics.com//SE?SID=SV_ex1DjMtInXp3R4g&SVID=Prod

Groups

Join one of four communications and technology groups -- Print, Image (advertising and public relations), Electronic (broadcasting), and Digital. Over the semester, your group will:

Textbooks

Class times, codes and locations

Instructor and Office Hours

Prof. BIll Kovarik, Ph.D. email wkovarik@radford.edu ph: 831-6033

Grades will be based on:

Policies

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